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Larisa Shepitko

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Years active
  
1956–1979

Name
  
Larisa Shepitko


Role
  
Children
  
Anton Klimov

Larisa Shepitko MOVIE LIST 5 Overlooked Female Directors Film Misery

Born
  
6 January 1938 (
1938-01-06
)
Artemovsk, Ukrainian SSR, USSR

Occupation
  
Film directorScreenwriter

Died
  
July 2, 1979, Tver Oblast, Russia

Spouse
  
Elem Klimov (m. 1965–1979)

Education
  
Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography

Movies
  
The Ascent, Wings, Farewell, You And Me, Heat

Similar People
  

Larisa, 1980 Elem Klimov


Larisa Shepitko - Zhivaya voda (Living Water) 1957 Documentary


Larisa Efimovna Shepitko (Russian: Лари́са Ефи́мовна Шепи́тько; Ukrainian: Лариса Юхимівна Шепітько; 6 January 1938 – 2 July 1979) was a Soviet film director, screenwriter and actress.

Contents

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Early life

Larisa Shepitko Eclipse Series 11 Larisa Shepitko From the Current

Shepitko was born in Artemovsk. In 1954 Shepitko graduated high school in Lviv. She went to the All-Union State Institute of Cinematography in Moscow as a student of Alexander Dovzhenko. She was a student of Dovzhenko's for 18 months until he died in 1956. Shepitko graduated from VGIK in 1963 with her prize winning diploma film Heat, made when she was 22 years old. It tells the story of a new farming community in Central Asia during the mid-1950s. During the editing phase of the film Larisa Shepitko was helped by Elem Klimov who also was a student at VGIK at that time. In 1963 they married and their one child, Anton was born in 1973. Heat won the Symposium Grand Prix ex aequo at the Karlovy Vary IFF in 1964 and an award at the All-Union Film Festival in Leningrad.

Film career

Shepitko's next film Wings concerns a much-decorated female fighter pilot of World War II. The pilot, now principal of a vocational college, is out of touch with her daughter and the new generation. The film aroused considerable Soviet press controversy at the time, as films were not meant to depict conflicts between children and parents (Vronskaya 1972, p. 39).

In 1969 she shot her first color film, a musical fantasy film titled 13 PM, a New Year's revue starring Vladimir Basov, Georgy Vitsin, Zinovy Gerdt, Spartak Mishulin and Anatoly Papanov.

Shepitko's third film was You and I (1971). This was her second film in color, and the last. It was favorably received at the Venice Film Festival, but lacked proper public exposure in the Soviet Union.

The Ascent (1977) was her last completed film and the one which garnered the most attention in the West. The actors Boris Plotnikov and Vladimir Gostyukhin received their first major roles in the film. In it, Shepitko returns to the sufferings of World War II, chronicling the trials and tribulations of a group of partisans in Belarus in the bleak winter of 1942. Two of the partisans are captured by the Wehrmacht and then interrogated by a local collaborator, played by Anatoly Solonitsyn, before one of them is executed in public. This depiction of the martyrdom of the Russians owes much to Christian iconography. The Ascent won the Golden Bear at the 27th Berlin International Film Festival in 1977.

Shepitko's growing international reputation led to an invitation to serve on the jury at the 28th Berlin International Film Festival in 1978. However, she was unable to complete any other films.

Death

Shepitko died in a car crash on a highway near the city of Tver with four members of her shooting team in 1979 while scouting locations for her planned adaptation of the novel Farewell to Matyora by Valentin Rasputin. Her husband, the director Elem Klimov, finished the work under the title Farewell and also made a 25-minute tribute entitled Larisa (1980).

References

Larisa Shepitko Wikipedia


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